We have measured the
We used
Using roentgen stereophotogrammetry we have recorded the
We evaluated the impact of stereo-visualisation of
We have studied the
We created virtual
We investigated the
The
The
This randomised study compared outcomes in patients with displaced fractures of the clavicle treated by open reduction and fixation by a reconstruction plate which was placed either superiorly or three-dimensionally. Between 2003 and 2006, 133 consecutive patients with a mean age of 44.2 years (18 to 60) with displaced midshaft fractures of the clavicle were allocated randomly to a
Objectives. Whilst gait speed is variable between healthy and injured adults, the extent to which speed alone alters the 3D in vivo knee kinematics has not been fully described. The purpose of this prospective study was to understand better the spatiotemporal and 3D knee kinematic changes induced by slow compared with normal self-selected walking speeds within young healthy adults. Methods. A total of 26 men and 25 women (18 to 35 years old) participated in this study. Participants walked on a treadmill with the KneeKG system at a slow imposed speed (2 km/hr) for three trials, then at a self-selected comfortable walking speed for another three trials. Paired t-tests, Wilcoxon signed-rank tests, Mann-Whitney U tests and Spearman’s rank correlation coefficients were conducted using Stata/IC 14 to compare kinematics of slow versus self-selected walking speed. Results. Both cadence and step length were reduced during slow gait compared with normal gait. Slow walking reduced flexion during standing (10.6° compared with 13.7°; p < 0.0001), and flexion range of movement (ROM) (53.1° compared with 57.3°; p < 0.0001). Slow walking also induced less adduction ROM (8.3° compared with 10.0°; p < 0.0001), rotation ROM (11.4. °. compared with 13.6. °. ; p < 0.0001), and anteroposterior translation ROM (8.5 mm compared with 10.1 mm; p < 0.0001). Conclusion. The reduced spatiotemporal measures, reduced flexion during stance, and knee ROM in all planes induced by slow walking demonstrate a stiff knee gait, similar to that previously demonstrated in osteoarthritis. Further research is required to determine if these characteristics induced in healthy knees by slow walking provide a valid model of osteoarthritic gait. Cite this article: N. Mannering, T. Young, T. Spelman, P. F. Choong.
Although it is clear that opening-wedge high
tibial osteotomy (HTO) changes alignment in the coronal plane, which is
its objective, it is not clear how this procedure affects knee kinematics
throughout the range of joint movement and in other planes. Our research question was: how does opening-wedge HTO change
three-dimensional tibiofemoral and patellofemoral kinematics in
loaded flexion in patients with varus deformity?Three-dimensional
kinematics were assessed over 0° to 60° of loaded flexion using
an MRI method before and after opening-wedge HTO in a cohort of
13 men (14 knees). Results obtained from an iterative statistical
model found that at six and 12 months after operation, opening-wedge
HTO caused increased anterior translation of the tibia (mean 2.6
mm, p <
0.001), decreased proximal translation of the patella
(mean –2.2 mm, p <
0.001), decreased patellar spin (mean –1.4°,
p <
0.05), increased patellar tilt (mean 2.2°, p <
0.05) and
changed three other parameters. The mean Western Ontario and McMaster
Universities Arthritis Index improved significantly (p <
0.001)
from 49.6 (standard deviation (. sd. ) 16.4) pre-operatively
to a mean of 28.2 (. sd. 16.6) at six months and a mean of
22.5 (. sd. 14.4) at 12 months. The
A clinical and radiological study was conducted on 97 total hip replacements performed for congenital hip dislocation in 79 patients between 1989 and 1998 using a
Pre-operative computerised
The gelatin-based haemostyptic compound Spongostan was tested as a
A new method of recording the
Objectives. There remains a lack of data on the reliability of methods to
estimate tibial coverage achieved during total knee replacement.
In order to address this gap, the intra- and interobserver reliability
of a
This study examined the relationship between the cross-over sign and the true
A computer-assisted method of preoperative planning was used to create virtual models of the deformed distal end of the radius after malunion of a fracture. By comparison with a similar model of the uninjured wrist, values were calculated for the angles and lengths to be corrected by osteotomy. Shifts of the distal fragment were analysed for 33 deformed wrists, 27 of which underwent corrective osteotomy and bone grafting. In more than half the cases there was dorsal or volar shift of 3 mm or more. The accuracy of the correction was measured by comparing the
To confirm whether developmental dysplasia of
the hip has a risk of hip impingement, we analysed maximum ranges
of movement to the point of bony impingement, and impingement location
using